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Abstract

This research project investigated physical aging and carbon dioxide plasticization behavior of glassy polymer films. Recent studies have shown that thin glassy polymer films undergo physical aging more rapidly than thick films. This suggests that thickness may also play a role in the plasticization and conditioning responses of thin glassy films in the presence of highly-sorbing penetrants such as CO₂. The effect of film thickness on CO₂ permeation and sorption was studied extensively through carefully defined and controlled methods that provide a basis for future study of plasticization behavior. Thin films are found to be more sensitive than thick films to CO₂ exposure, undergoing more extensive and rapid plasticization at any pressure. The response of glassy polymers films to CO₂ is not only dependent on thickness, but also on aging time, CO₂ pressure, exposure time, and prior history. Thin films experiencing constant CO₂ exposure for longer periods of time exhibit an initial large increase in CO₂ permeability, which eventually reaches a maximum, followed by a significant decrease in permeability for the duration of the experiment. Thick films, in contrast, do not seem to exhibit this trend for the range of conditions explored. For a series of different polymers, the extent of plasticization response tracks with CO₂ solubility. There is little data available for gas sorption in thin glassy polymer films. In this work, a novel method involving spectroscopic ellipsometry is used to obtain simultaneously the film thickness and CO₂ sorption capacity for thin glassy polymer films. This allows a more comprehensive look at CO₂ permeability, sorption, and diffusivity as a function of both CO₂ pressure and exposure time. Like the gas permeation data, these experiments suggest that thin film sorption behavior is substantially different than that of thick film counterparts. Dynamic ellipsometry experiments show that refractive index minima, fractional free volume maxima, and CO₂ diffusivity maxima correlate well with observed CO₂ permeability maxima observed for thin Matrimid® films. These experiments demonstrate that plasticization and physical aging are competing processes. Aging, however, dominates over long time scales. Over time, CO₂ diffusivity is most affected by these competing effects, and the evolution of CO₂ diffusivity is shown to be the main contributing factor to changes in CO₂ permeability at constant pressure.